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Rev Environ Health. 2017 Dec 20;32(4):315-331. doi: 10.1515/reveh-2016-0046.
Childhood obesity has been an epidemic particularly in high-income countries. There is a considerable volume of data and studies depicting the rising number of obese children and adolescents in different countries. As suggested by the literature, physical inactivity is one the main drivers of childhood obesity. This paper addresses the associations of the built environment with physical activity of children in order to find to theoretically facilitate intervention and prevention measures. Literature: There is a large body of literature describing the overall determinants of children's physical activity. The built environment is one of the influential factors that have been partially examined. Among the physical environment indicators, distance to school has been repeatedly reported to be negatively associated with active travels to school; thus, it indirectly affects physical activity of children. Apart from distance to school, some other built environment indicators have also been less researched, such as population and construction densities, distance to the city center, land use mix, and type of urban fabric (urban, suburban, etc.).
The purpose of this review was to shed light on some of the less-studied areas of the existing literature related to the relationship between the built environment and physical activity of children aged between 3 and 12 years.
The English-language publications, majority of which were peer-reviewed journal papers published in recent years, were collected and descriptively analyzed. Two large categories were the backbone of this narrative review: (1) non-school outdoor activities of children that take place in the residential neighborhood and (2) commuting to school and the related interventions such as safe routes to school.
Seven areas were synthesized by this review of the literature. Differences in associations of the built environment and physical activity in (1) different types of urban forms and land uses such as urban, suburban, high-density, etc.; (2) different city sizes such as small towns, mid-sized cities, large cities and megacities; (3) different cultures, subcultures and ethnicities in the same city of country, e.g. the Asian minority of London or the Turkish minority of Germany; (4) between perceptions of parents and children and associations with children's physical activity, e.g. how they perceive safety and security of the neighborhood; (5) associations of the built environment with children's physical activity in less-studied contexts, e.g. many developing and under-developed countries or eastern European countries; (6) differences in built environment - physical activity associations in different regions of the world, e.g. continents; and finally (7) associations between mobility patterns of parents and their children's physical activity, for instance, the frequencies of taking public transport or walk as a commute mode.
Researchers are recommended to focus their less-researched subtopics mentioned under the Results section in accordance with local conditions observed in less-researched contexts so that measures and interventions are accordingly planned.
儿童肥胖症一直是一个特别在高收入国家的流行问题。有相当数量的数据和研究描述了不同国家肥胖儿童和青少年数量的增加。正如文献所表明的,身体活动不足是儿童肥胖的主要驱动因素之一。本文旨在探讨建成环境与儿童身体活动的关系,以便从理论上促进干预和预防措施。
有大量文献描述了儿童身体活动的总体决定因素。建成环境是一个已经部分研究过的影响因素。在物理环境指标中,学校距离已被反复报告与积极上学的出行之间存在负相关关系;因此,它间接地影响了儿童的身体活动。除了学校距离,一些其他的建成环境指标也研究得较少,如人口和建筑密度、到市中心的距离、土地利用混合以及城市结构类型(城市、郊区等)。
本综述的目的是阐明与儿童(3 至 12 岁)的建成环境与身体活动之间关系相关的现有文献中一些研究较少的领域。
收集并描述性分析了以英语发表的出版物,其中大部分是近年来发表的同行评议期刊论文。本叙述性综述有两个主要类别:(1)发生在居住社区的儿童非学校户外活动;(2)上学交通和相关干预措施,如安全上学路线。
通过对文献的综述,综合了七个方面。建成环境与身体活动的关联在以下方面存在差异:(1)不同类型的城市形态和土地利用,如城市、郊区、高密度等;(2)不同规模的城市,如小镇、中型城市、大城市和特大城市;(3)同一城市或国家的不同文化、亚文化和种族,例如伦敦的亚裔少数民族或德国的土耳其少数民族;(4)父母和孩子对环境的看法以及与孩子身体活动的关联,例如他们如何看待邻里的安全和保障;(5)建成环境与在研究较少的背景下儿童身体活动的关联,例如许多发展中和欠发达国家或东欧国家;(6)在世界不同地区建成环境-身体活动关联的差异,例如各大洲;最后(7)父母的移动模式及其孩子身体活动之间的关联,例如乘坐公共交通工具或步行作为通勤模式的频率。
建议研究人员根据在研究较少的背景下观察到的当地情况,关注结果部分中提到的研究较少的子主题,以便相应地计划措施和干预措施。